Post on 13-Jul-2020
IRAN 2018 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT
Executive Summary
The constitution defines the country as an Islamic republic, and specifies Twelver
Ja’afari Shia Islam as the official state religion. It states all laws and regulations
must be based on “Islamic criteria” and an official interpretation of sharia. The
constitution states citizens shall enjoy human, political, economic, and other rights,
“in conformity with Islamic criteria.” The penal code specifies the death sentence
for proselytizing and attempts by non-Muslims to convert Muslims, as well as for
moharebeh (“enmity against God”) and sabb al-nabi (“insulting the Prophet”).
According to the penal code, the application of the death penalty varies depending
on the religion of both the perpetrator and the victim. The law prohibits Muslim
citizens from changing or renouncing their religious beliefs. The constitution also
stipulates five non-Ja’afari Islamic schools shall be “accorded full respect” and
official status in matters of religious education and certain personal affairs. The
constitution states Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians (excluding converts from
Islam) are the only recognized religious minorities permitted to worship and to
form religious societies “within the limits of the law.” The government continued
to execute individuals on charges of moharebeh, including two Kurdish minority
prisoners at Rajai Shahr Prison on September 8. Human rights groups raised
concerns regarding the use of torture, forced confessions, and denials of access to
legal counsel. On June 18, the government executed Mohammad Salas, a member
of the minority Gonabadi Sufi Dervish Order, for allegedly killing three police
officers during clashes between Gonabadi Sufis and security forces in February.
Human rights organizations widely decried Salas’ conviction and execution, noting
marked irregularities in his case and allegations of forced confession under police
torture. The authorities reportedly denied Salas access to a lawyer and dismissed
defense witnesses who could have testified to the fact that Salas was already in
custody at the time of the police officers’ deaths. Salas’ execution and alleged
show trial was largely seen by the international community as being part of the
region’s broader crackdown on Sufi dervishes. International media and
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) reported authorities detained more than
300 Gonabadi Sufi dervishes after police open fired on them during February 19-
20 demonstrations in Tehran where they were protesting the house arrest of their
spiritual leader, Noor Ali Tabandeh. One of the Sufi dervishes arrested in
February, Mohammed Raji, died in police custody. The Revolutionary Court of
Tehran sentenced 20 of the detained Gonabadi Sufis to lengthy prison terms for
crimes of “assembly and collusion against national security,” “disturbing public
order,” “disobeying law enforcement agents,” and “propaganda against the state.”
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The Iran Prison Atlas, compiled by the U.S.-based NGO United for Iran, stated at
least 272 members of minority religious groups remained imprisoned for being
religious minority practitioners. The government continued to harass, interrogate,
and arrest Baha’is, Christians (particularly converts), Sunni Muslims, and other
religious minorities, and regulated Christian religious practices closely to enforce a
prohibition on proselytizing. The Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI)
reported that the government banned Molavi Abdolhamid Ismaeelzahi, the
country’s leading Sunni cleric and Friday prayer leader of Zahedan, from traveling
outside of Zahedan. Mohabat News, a Christian news website, reported the
detention and abuse of Karen Vartanian, an Armenian Christian. Vartanian
reportedly experienced physical and psychological abuse and suffered a heart
attack as a result of beatings. According to media and NGO reports in early
December, the government arrested 142 Christians across multiple cities in one
month, including 114 in one week. According to Sufi media and NGOs, Shia
clerics and prayer leaders continued to denounce Sufism and the activities of Sufis
in both sermons and public statements, and the government closed Sufi websites,
such as the Gonabadi Sufi Order’s websites, in an attempt to erase their online
identity. Yarsanis stated they continued to face discrimination and harassment by
authorities. The government reportedly denied building permits for places of
worship and employment and higher educational opportunities for members of
religious minorities, and confiscated or restricted their religious materials. There
were continued reports of authorities placing restrictions on Baha’i businesses or
forcing them to shut down. On November 23, the Baha’i International Community
(BIC) reported the government arrested more than 20 Baha’is in multiple cities in
the provinces of Tehran, Isfahan, Mazandaran, and East Azerbaijan over the course
of two weeks. On October 16, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported the
government arrested more than 20 Baha’is in Shiraz, Karaj, and Isfahan on
unknown charges in August and September. CHRI reported the government
detained Shiraz city council member Mehdi Hajati for 10 days for defending the
“false Baha’i faith” after he tweeted about his attempts to free two Baha’i
detainees. The judiciary subsequently placed Hajati under judicial surveillance and
banned him from his seat on the council.
According to multiple sources, non-Shia Muslims and those affiliated with a
religion other than Islam, especially members of the Baha’i community, continued
to face societal discrimination and harassment, and employers experienced social
pressures not to hire Baha’is or to dismiss them from their private sector jobs.
Baha’is reported there were continued incidents of destruction or vandalism of
their cemeteries.
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United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The U.S. has no diplomatic relations with the country. The U.S. government used
public statements, sanctions, and diplomatic initiatives in international forums to
condemn the government’s abuses and restrictions on worship by religious
minorities. Senior U.S. government officials publicly reiterated calls for the
release of prisoners held on religious grounds. In July the Secretary of State called
attention to the situation of religious freedom in the country in a speech and USA
Today op-ed piece. In his opinion piece, he said, “Hundreds of Sufi Muslims in
Iran remain imprisoned on account of their beliefs, with reports of several dying at
the hands of Iran’s brutal security forces. The religious intolerance of the regime
in Iran also applies to Christians, Jews, Sunnis, Baha’is, Zoroastrians, and other
minority religious groups simply trying to practice their faiths.” At the July U.S.-
hosted Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom, the U.S. and four other
governments issued a statement on Iran. In the statement, the governments said,
“As representatives of the international community, we stand together in
condemning the systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom
taking place in Iran and call on authorities to ensure religious freedom for all.”
During a September press briefing, the Special Representative for Iran called for an
end of religious persecution in the country, stating: “What we are demanding of
the Iranian regime…stop persecuting civil society, please provide all Iranian
citizens with due process regardless of their political and religious beliefs.” In
June a Department of State spokesperson condemned the “the Iranian
government’s execution of Mohammad Salas, a member of the long-persecuted
Iranian Gonabadi Sufi dervish community.” The United States supported the
rights of members of religious minority groups in the country through actions in
the UN, including votes to extend the mandate of the special rapporteur. The U.S.
government also supported resolutions expressing concern over the country’s
human rights practices, including the continued persecution of religious minorities.
Since 1999, Iran has been designated as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC)
under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 for having engaged in or
tolerated particularly severe violations of religious freedom. On November 28, the
Secretary of State redesignated Iran as a CPC. The following sanction
accompanied the designation: the existing ongoing travel restrictions based on
serious human rights abuses under section 221(a)(1)(C) of the Iran Threat
Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012, pursuant to section 402(c)(5) of
the Act.
Section I. Religious Demography
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The U.S. government estimates the population at 83 million (July 2018 estimate).
According to U.S. government estimates, Muslims constitute 99.4 percent of the
population; 90-95 percent are Shia and 5-10 percent Sunni (mostly Turkmen,
Arabs, Baluchis, and Kurds living in the northeast, southwest, southeast, and
northwest, respectively). Afghan refugees, economic migrants, and displaced
persons also make up a significant Sunni population but accurate statistics on the
breakdown of the Afghan refugee population between Sunni and Shia are
unavailable. There are no official statistics available on the number of Muslims
who practice Sufism, although unofficial reports estimate several million.
According to U.S. government estimates, groups constituting the remaining less
than 1 percent of the population include Baha’is, Christians, Jews, Sabean-
Mandaeans, Zoroastrians, and Yarsanis. The three largest non-Muslim minorities
are Baha’is, Christians, and Yarsanis.
According to HRW data, Baha’is number at least 300,000.
According to World Christian Database statistics, there are approximately 547,000
Christians, although some estimates suggest there may be many more Christians
than actually reported. While the government Statistical Center of Iran reports
there are 117,700 Christians, Elam Ministries, a Christian organization, estimates
that there could be between 300,000 and one million Christians. The majority of
Christians are ethnic Armenians concentrated in Tehran and Isfahan. Estimates by
the Assyrian Church of the total Assyrian and Chaldean Christian population put
their combined number at 7,000. There are also Protestant denominations,
including evangelical groups, but there is no authoritative data on their numbers.
Christian groups outside the country estimate the size of the Protestant community
to be less than 10,000, although many Protestants and other converts to
Christianity from Islam reportedly practice in secret.
There is no official count of Yarsanis, but the Human Rights Activist News
Agency (HRANA) estimates there are up to two million. Yarsanis are mainly
located in Loristan and the Kurdish regions.
According to Zoroastrian groups and the government-run Statistical Center of Iran,
the population includes approximately 25,000 Zoroastrians.
According to the Tehran Jewish Committee, the population includes approximately
9,000 Jews, while a British media report estimated their number at 18,000-20,000.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The population, according to one international NGO, includes 5,000-10,000
Sabean-Mandaeans.
Section II. Status of Government Respect for Religious Freedom
Legal Framework
The constitution defines the country as an Islamic republic and designates Twelver
Ja’afari Shia Islam as the official state religion. The constitution stipulates all laws
and regulations must be based on “Islamic criteria” and an official interpretation of
sharia. The constitution states citizens shall enjoy all human, political, economic,
social, and cultural rights, “in conformity with Islamic criteria.”
The constitution prohibits the investigation of an individual’s ideas, and states no
one may be “subjected to questioning and aggression for merely holding an
opinion.” The law prohibits Muslim citizens from changing or renouncing their
religious beliefs. The only recognized conversions are from another religion to
Islam. Apostasy from Islam is a crime punishable by death. Under the law, a child
born to a Muslim father is Muslim.
By law, non-Muslims may not engage in public persuasion or attempted
conversion of Muslims. These activities are considered proselytizing and
punishable by death. In addition, citizens who are not recognized as Christians,
Zoroastrians, or Jews may not engage in public religious expression, such as
worshiping in a church or wearing religious symbols such as a cross. Some
exceptions are made for foreigners belonging to unrecognized religious groups.
The penal code specifies the death sentence for moharebeh (enmity against God),
fisad fil-arz (“corruption on earth,” which includes apostasy or heresy), and sabb
al-nabi (“insulting the prophets” or “insulting the sanctities”). According to the
penal code, the application of the death penalty varies depending on the religion of
both the perpetrator and the victim.
The constitution states the four Sunni (Hanafi, Shafi, Maliki, and Hanbali) and the
Shia Zaydi schools of Islam are “deserving of total respect” and their followers are
free to perform religious practices. It states these schools may follow their own
jurisprudence in matters of religious education and certain personal affairs,
including marriage, divorce, and inheritance.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The constitution states Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians are the only recognized
religious minorities. “Within the limits of the law,” they have permission to
perform religious rites and ceremonies and to form religious societies. They are
also free to address personal affairs and religious education according to their own
religious canon. Any citizen who is not a registered member of one of these three
groups, or who cannot prove that his or her family was Christian prior to 1979, is
considered Muslim.
Since the law prohibits citizens from converting from Islam to another religion, the
government only recognizes the Christianity of citizens who are Armenian or
Assyrian Christians, since the presence of these groups in the country predates
Islam, or of citizens who can prove they or their families were Christian prior to
the 1979 revolution. The government also recognizes Sabean-Mandaeans as
Christian, even though the Sabean-Mandaeans state that they do not consider
themselves as such. The government often considers Yarsanis as Shia Muslims
practicing Sufism, but Yarsanis identify Yarsan as a distinct faith (known as Ahle
Haq or Kakai). Yarsanis may also self-register as Shia in order to obtain
government services. The government does not recognize evangelical Protestants
as Christian.
Citizens who are members of one of the recognized religious minorities must
register with the authorities. Registration conveys certain rights, including the use
of alcohol for religious purposes. Authorities may close a church and arrest its
leaders if churchgoers fail to register or unregistered individuals attend services.
Individuals who convert to Christianity are not recognized as Christian under the
law. They may not register and are not entitled to the same rights as recognized
members of Christian communities.
The supreme leader oversees extrajudicial Special Clerical Courts, not provided for
by the constitution. The courts, headed by a Shia Islamic legal scholar, operate
outside the judiciary’s purview and investigate offenses committed by clerics,
including political statements inconsistent with government policy and
nonreligious activities. The courts also issue rulings based on independent
interpretation of Islamic legal sources.
The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance and the Ministry of Intelligence and
Security (MOIS) monitor religious activity. The Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) also monitors churches.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The constitution provides for freedom of the press except when it is “harmful to
the principles of Islam or the rights of the public.”
The Ministry of Education (MOE) determines the religious curriculum of public
schools. All school curricula, public and private, must include a course on Shia
Islamic teachings, and all pupils must pass this course in order to advance to the
next educational level through university. Sunni students and students from
recognized minority religious groups must take and pass the courses on Shia Islam,
although they may also take separate courses on their own religious beliefs.
Recognized religious minority groups, except for Sunni Muslims, may operate
private schools. The MOE supervises the private schools operated by the
recognized minority religious groups and imposes certain curriculum requirements.
The ministry must approve all textbooks used in coursework, including religious
texts. These schools may provide their own religious instruction and in languages
other than Farsi, but authorities must approve those texts as well. Minority
communities must bear the cost of translating the texts into Farsi so the authorities
can review them. Directors of such private schools must demonstrate loyalty to the
official state religion. This requirement, known as gozinesh review, is an
evaluation to determine adherence to the government ideology and system as well
as knowledge of the government interpretation of Shia Islam.
The law bars Baha’is from founding their own educational institutions. A Ministry
of Science, Research, and Technology order requires universities to exclude
Baha’is from access to higher education or expel them if their religious affiliation
becomes known. Government regulation states Baha’is are only permitted to
enroll in universities if they do not identify themselves as Baha’is. To register for
the university entrance examination, Baha’i students must answer a basic multiple-
choice question and identify themselves as followers of a religion other than
Baha’i (e.g., Muslim, Christian, Jewish, or Zoroastrian). To pass the entrance
examination, university applicants must pass an exam on Islamic, Christian, or
Jewish theology based on their official religious affiliation.
According to the constitution, Islamic scholars in the Assembly of Experts, an
assembly of 86 popularly elected and supreme leader-approved clerics whose
qualifications include piety and religious scholarship, elect the supreme leader, the
country’s head of state. To “safeguard” Islamic ordinances and to ensure
legislation passed by the Islamic Consultative Assembly (i.e., the parliament or
“Majles”) is compatible with Islam, a Guardian Council composed of six Shia
clerics appointed by the supreme leader, and six Shia legal scholars nominated by
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
the judiciary, must review and approve all legislation. The Guardian Council also
vets all candidates for the Assembly of Experts, president, and parliament and
supervises elections for those bodies.
The constitution bans the parliament from passing laws contrary to Islam and states
there may be no amendment to its provisions related to the “Islamic character” of
the political or legal system or to the specification that Twelver Ja’afari Shia Islam
is the official religion.
Non-Muslims may not be elected to a representative body or hold senior
government, intelligence, or military positions, with the exception of five of the
290 parliament seats reserved by the constitution for recognized religious
minorities. There are two seats reserved for Armenian Christians, one for Assyrian
and Chaldean Christians together, one for Jews, and one for Zoroastrians.
The constitution states in regions where followers of one of the recognized schools
of Sunni Islam constitute the majority, local regulations are to be in accordance
with that school within the bounds of the jurisdiction of local councils and without
infringing upon the rights of the followers of other schools.
According to the constitution, a judge should rule on a case on the basis of the
codified law, but in a situation where such law is absent, he should deliver his
judgment on the basis of “authoritative Islamic sources and authentic fatwas.”
The constitution specifies the government must “treat non-Muslims in conformity
with the principles of Islamic justice and equity, and to respect their human rights,
as long as those non-Muslims have not conspired or acted against Islam and the
Islamic Republic.”
The law authorizes collection of “blood money” or diyeh as restitution to families
for the death of Muslims and members of recognized religious minorities. Baha’i
families, however, are not entitled to receive diyeh. This law also reduces the
diyeh for recognized religious minorities and women to half that of a Muslim man.
By law, non-Muslims may not serve in the judiciary, the security services (separate
from regular armed forces), or as public school principals. Officials screen
candidates for elected offices and applicants for public sector employment based
on their adherence to and knowledge of Islam and loyalty to the Islamic Republic
(gozinesh requirements), although members of recognized religious minorities may
serve in the lower ranks of government if they meet these loyalty requirement.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
Government workers who do not observe Islamic principles and rules are subject
to penalties and may be fired or barred from work in a particular sector.
The government bars Baha’is from all government employment and forbids Baha’i
participation in the governmental social pension system. Baha’is may not receive
compensation for injury or crimes committed against them and may not inherit
property. A religious fatwa from the supreme leader encourages citizens to avoid
all dealings with Baha’is.
The government does not recognize Baha’i marriages or divorces but allows a civil
attestation of marriage to serve as a marriage certificate, which allows for basic
recognition of the union but does not offer legal protections in marital disputes.
Baha’i activists report this often leaves women without the legal protections of
government-recognized marriage contracts.
Recognized religious groups issue marriage contracts in accordance with their
religious laws.
The constitution permits the formation of political parties based on Islam or on one
of the recognized religious minorities, provided the parties do not violate the
“criteria of Islam,” among other stipulations.
The constitution states the military must be Islamic, must be committed to Islamic
ideals, and must recruit individuals who are committed to the objectives of the
Islamic revolution. In addition to the regular military, the IRGC is charged with
upholding the Islamic nature of the revolution at home and abroad. The law does
not provide for exemptions from military service based on religious affiliation.
The law forbids non-Muslims from holding positions of authority over Muslims in
the armed forces. Members of recognized religious minorities with a college
education may serve as officers during their mandatory military service, but may
not continue to serve beyond the mandatory service period to become career
military officers.
The country is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
but at ratification entered a general reservation “not to apply any provisions or
articles of the Convention that are incompatible with Islamic Laws and the
international legislation in effect.”
Government Practices
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
According to Amnesty International (AI) and other international human rights
NGOs, the government convicted and executed dissidents, political reformers, and
peaceful protesters on charges of moharebeh and anti-Islamic propaganda.
According to AI and CHRI, authorities executed Zaniar Moradi and Loghman
Moradi, two Kurdish minority prisoners, at Rajai Shahr Prison on September 8
after they were convicted on charges of moharebeh and murder, despite concerns
of AI, CHRI, and other human rights NGOs regarding the use of torture, forced
confessions, and denials of access to legal counsel. Prior to the executions, the UN
special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran and the UN special
rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions released a joint
statement writing, “We urge the Government of Iran to immediately halt their
executions and to annul the death sentences against them. We are alarmed by
information received that Zanyar and Loghman Moradi suffered human rights
violations before and during their trial, including torture and other ill-treatment and
denial of access to a lawyer.”
Media outlets reported that on September 3, authorities hanged three Baluchi
prisoners whom the Zahedan Revolutionary Court had sentenced to death in
November 2017 on charges of moharebeh for allegedly participating in a firefight
with police forces that led to the death of a police officer. According to HRANA,
“the three wrote an open letter detailing mistreatment and torture at the hands of
their interrogators.”
International media and human rights organizations reported that the government
executed Mohammad Salas, a member of the Gonabadi Sufi Dervish Order, on
June 18 for allegedly killing three police officers during clashes between Gonabadi
Sufis and security forces in February. Human rights organizations, including AI,
CHRI, and HRANA, decried Salas’ conviction and execution, noting marked
irregularities in his case and allegations of forced confession under police torture.
The authorities reportedly denied Salas access to a lawyer and dismissed defense
witnesses who could have testified to the fact that Salas was already in custody at
the time of the police officers’ deaths. According to AI, “Mohammad Salas’ trial
was grossly unfair. He said he was forced under torture to make a ‘confession’
against himself. This ‘confession,’ taken from his hospital bed, was…used as the
only piece of evidence to convict him. He was not allowed access to his chosen
lawyer.”
Human rights organizations widely reported the detention of Zeinab Taheri, a
human rights lawyer, who was defending Salas. Authorities arrested Taheri one
day after Salas was executed. On June 19, the Prosecutor’s Office for Culture and
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United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
Media summoned Taheri and detained her on charges of “disturbing the public
opinion,” “spreading propaganda against the system,” and “publishing lies.”
Tehran prosecutor Jafari Dolatabadi subsequently said during a press conference
that Taheri had “incited the public opinion and mobilized the counterrevolution
against the judiciary,” and that “the hostile media used her remarks to published
reports against the judiciary.”
Residents of provinces with large Sunni populations, including Kurdistan,
Khuzestan, and Sistan and Baluchistan, reported continued repression by judicial
authorities and members of the security services, including extrajudicial killings,
arbitrary arrest, and torture in detention, as well as discrimination, including
suppression of religious rights, lack of basic government services, and inadequate
funding for infrastructure projects. The March report by UN special rapporteur on
the situation of human rights in Iran Asma Jahangir highlighted the
disproportionately large number of executions of Sunni Kurdish prisoners. The
report stated authorities often detained Sunni Kurds “on charges related to various
activities such as environmental activism, eating in public during the month of
Ramadan, working as border couriers engaged in smuggling illicit goods, or for
celebrating the results of the referendum held in neighboring Iraqi Kurdistan,”
among other political or security-related charges.
Human rights NGOs, including HRANA, reported throughout the year on the
extremely poor conditions inside Ardabil Prison, including reports of Shia guards
routinely torturing Sunni prisoners. In March CHRI reported that Mohammad
Saber Malek-Raeisi, a Baluchi Sunni Muslim, who had been imprisoned since
2009, was suffering from serious injuries as a result of repeated beatings by guards
during the four years he has been held in Ardabil Prison. According to CHRI,
prison authorities severely beat and tortured Malek-Raeisi in December 2017 after
he went on a hunger strike to protest conditions. Since then, his mother reported
him ill and unable to see in one of his eyes.
HRANA also reported increased pressure on Sunni inmates at Rajai Shahr Prison
in Karaj and Dizal Abad Prison in Kermanshah. According to HRANA, on August
7, approximately 30 MOIS agents and 50 Special Forces raided a ward at Rajai
Shahr housing minority Sunni inmates, beating the prisoners and taking their
belongings. The security forces reportedly insulted the Sunni prisoners’ religious
beliefs during the raid. Authorities reportedly denied medical treatment to those
injured from the beatings. The Rajai Shahr incident was reportedly retribution for
the inmates’ religious and political activities.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
In February HRANA reported seven Sunni prisoners in Rajai Shahr Prison
detained since 2009 continued to await a new trial after the Supreme Court rejected
the death sentences handed down to them in 2015. The prisoners denied engaging
in violence and said the authorities arrested them because of their religious beliefs
and activities, including attending religious meetings and disseminating religious
material.
According to Baluchi rights activists, Baluchis faced government discrimination as
both Sunni religious practitioners and an ethnic minority group. Baluchi rights
activists reported continued arbitrary arrests, physical abuse, and unfair trials of
journalists and human rights activists. Baluchi rights activists reported that
authorities often pressured family members of those in prison to remain silent.
HRANA reported that on June 17, authorities arrested Sunni Baluchi civil rights
activist Abdollah Bozorgzadeh for joining a gathering in support of the 41
“Iranshahr Girls,” whom a group of well-connected men reportedly raped in the
southeastern city of Iranshahr, located in the predominately-Sunni province of
Sistan and Baluchistan. Upon his arrest, authorities transferred Bozorgzadeh to an
IRGC-run Zahedan detention center, where Bozorgzadah said he was tortured. In
July CHRI reported that authorities arrested at least 10 Baluchi activists for
protesting the alleged rapes. At his sermon on June 15, Iranshahr’s Sunni Friday
Prayer Leader Mohammad Tayyeb Mollazehi reportedly stated that a suspect in
custody had confessed he and several other men had raped 41 women. However,
according to CHRI, officials denied either that the rapes happened or claimed
elements of the case had been falsified. According to Iran Wire, the country’s
prosecutor general threatened legal action against the Sunni prayer leader because
the alleged perpetrators belonged to some of the city’s most influential families,
including connections to or membership in the IRGC, Basij, military, and police.
The government continued to incarcerate numerous prisoners on various charges
related to religion. According to the Iran Prison Atlas, a database of political
prisoners compiled by the U.S.-based NGO United for Iran, at least 272 members
of minority religious groups remained imprisoned for being religious minority
practitioners. Of the total number of prisoners in the database, at least 165 were
imprisoned on charges of moharebeh, 34 for “insulting the Supreme Leader and
Ayatollah Khomeini,” 21 for “insulting Islam,” and 20 for “corruption on earth,” a
term according to the Oxford Dictionary of Islam meaning in Quranic usage
“corrupt conditions, caused by unbelievers or unjust people, that threaten social
and political wellbeing.” Shia religious leaders who did not support government
policies reportedly continued to face intimidation and arrest.
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International Religious Freedom Report for 2018
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
Various media outlets and human rights organizations reported incidents of severe
physical mistreatment of the Gonabadi Sufi minority. According to CHRI, guards
at the Great Tehran Penitentiary attacked and beat Gonabadi detainees on August
29. Several of the inmates reportedly were badly injured, suffered broken bones,
and were moved to solitary confinement. HRANA specified that the guards
attacked at least 18 dervishes with batons and electroshock weapons in response to
the prisoners’ protests of the beating of female Sufis in Gharchak Prison.
International media and NGOs widely reported more than 300 Gonabadi Sufi
dervishes were detained after police open fired on them during February 19-20
demonstrations in Tehran to protest the house arrest of their spiritual leader, Noor
Ali Tabandeh. Authorities held Tabandeh, aged 91, under house arrest in Tehran
since at least February and denied him access to urgently needed medical care.
According to HRW, Mohammed Raji, one of those arrested in February, died in
police custody. Authorities told Raji’s family on March 4 that he died from
repeated blows to the head. The family said that Raji was injured, but alive at the
time of his arrest. HRW stated that authorities refused to clarify the sequence and
timing of events that led to Raji’s death.
According to CHRI and other human rights organizations, the Revolutionary Court
of Tehran sentenced 20 of the detained Gonabadi Sufis to lengthy prison terms for
crimes of “assembly and collusion against national security,” “disturbing public
order,” “disobeying law enforcement agents,” and “propaganda against the state.”
Mostafa Abdi received the most severe sentence with 26 years in prison, 148
lashes, two years of internal exile in Sistan and Baluchistan Province, a two-year
ban on social activities, and a two-year prohibition on traveling abroad. In August
HRW reported that authorities had sentenced at least 208 dervishes since May “to
prison terms and other punishments that violate their basic rights.” The courts
delivered sentences that included prison terms ranging from four months to 26
years, flogging, internal exile, travel bans, and a ban on membership in social and
political groups. CHRI reported that on February 19 Iranian security forces
arrested Reza Entessari and Kasra Nouri, reporters with the Sufi news website
Majzooban-e-Noor, while they were covering the violent dispersal of protests of
treatment of the Gonabadi dervishes in Tehran.
On March 3, according to CHRI, the Revolutionary Court of Tehran sentenced
Mohammad Ali Taheri, founder of the spiritual doctrine Interuniversalism and the
Erfan-e Halgheh group, to five years in prison for a second time, on charges of
“spreading corruption on earth.” This sentence followed the Supreme Court’s
rejection of Taheri’s prior death sentence in December 2017. According to press,
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the Supreme Court ordered Taheri retried, citing a faulty investigation. The case of
Taheri, imprisoned since 2011, drew widespread international condemnation,
including from human rights organizations, NGOs, and the UN special rapporteur.
On August 19, according to CHRI, a court sentenced journalist and satirist Amir
Mohammad Hossein Miresmaili to 10 years in prison for “insulting sacred tenets
and the imams,” “insulting government and judicial officials,” “spreading
falsehoods to disturb public opinion,” and “publishing immoral and indecent
matters.” Authorities had arrested him in April after he posted a tweet criticizing
the Friday prayer leader of Mashhad and referencing a Shia imam.
On October 25, according to CHRI, the government arrested journalist Pouyan
Khoshhal and charged him with “insulting the divinity of Imam Hossein and other
members of the prophet’s blessed household” after he used the word “demise”
instead of “martyrdom” in referring to Imam Hossein in an article.
There continued to be reports of arrests and harassment of Sunni clerics and
congregants. In February CHRI reported government officials banned Molavi
Abdolhamid Ismaeelzahi, the country’s leading Sunni cleric and Friday prayer
leader of Zahedan, from traveling outside of Zahedan. According to a July Radio
Farda report, Member of Parliament (MP) Mahmoud Sadeghi, along with 20 other
legislators, called upon the intelligence minister to lift the travel ban imposed on
“Iran’s most prominent Sunni clergyman.” The MPs questioned the government’s
reason for the travel restrictions and reiterated the right to freedom of movement.
On September 22, HRANA reported the Special Clerical Court of Hamedan
arraigned Sunni preacher and activist Hashem Hossein Panahi, “presumably for
participating in the funeral of executed political prisoner Ramin Hussein Panahi.”
After he delivered a sermon at the funeral, MOIS filed charges against Hashem
Hossein Panahi with the Special Clerical Court, which is under the direct control of
the supreme leader. The charges included “propaganda against the regime” and
“disturbing public opinion.”
In response to the September 22 terrorist attack on a military parade in Ahvaz,
Khuzestan, a region with a sizeable Sunni Arab population and where international
media report longstanding economic and social grievances have led to sporadic
protests, international press and human rights organizations reported domestic
backlash against Arab Sunnis. AI and the Ahvaz Human Rights Organization
reported the authorities arrested hundreds of Ahvazi political and minority activists
in the aftermath of the September 22 attack.
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CHRI reported that authorities detained Sunni rap artist Shah Baloch, whose real
name is Emad Bijarzehi, on June 20 in the southeastern port city of Chabahar for
singing about state oppression against ethnic and religious minorities in Sistan and
Baluchistan Province. According to CHRI, authorities did not permit Baloch
access to legal counsel.
Human rights organizations and Christian NGOs continued to report authorities
arrested Christians for their religious affiliation or activities, including members of
unrecognized churches for operating illegally in private homes or on charges of
supporting and accepting assistance from “enemy” countries. Many arrests
reportedly took place during police raids on religious gatherings and included
confiscations of religious property. News reports stated that authorities subjected
arrested Christians to severe physical and psychological mistreatment, which at
times included beatings and solitary confinement.
CHRI reported that on January 6 the Revolutionary Court in Tehran sentenced
Shamiram Isavi, the wife of Victor Bet Tamraz, who formerly led the country’s
Assyrian Pentecostal Church, to five years in prison. The judge convicted her on
charges of “acting against national security by organizing home churches,
attending Christian seminars abroad, and training Christian leaders in Iran for the
purpose of espionage.” Authorities arrested Isavi and her husband in their home in
Tehran on December 26, 2014, along with their son, Ramin Bet Tamraz, and 12
Christian converts. In June 2016, the revolutionary court judge sentenced Victor
Bet Tamraz and Christian converts Hadi Asgari and Kavian Fallah Mohammadi to
10 years in prison each, while convert Amin Afshar Naderi received a 15-year
prison sentence. In February 2018, the UN special rapporteurs on freedom of
religion or belief, on the situation of human rights in Iran, on minority issues, and
on the right to health issued a joint public statement expressing concern at the
lengthy sentences for Bet Tamraz, Asgari, Naderi, as well as reports of their
mistreatment in prison, and, broadly, the targeting of religious minorities,
particularly Christian converts. Authorities released Bet Tamraz, Asgari,
Mohammadi, and Naderi on bail while they appealed their sentences.
According to international media and various NGOs, including the Christian World
Watch Monitor (CWWM) and Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), on May 2,
Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani, Yasser Mossayebzadeh, Saheb Fadaie, and Mohammad
Reza Omidi received notification that the appeals court upheld their 10-year prison
sentences for “acting against national security” by “promoting Zionist Christianity”
and running house churches. Instead of utilizing the customary summons
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procedure, CWWM and CSW reported that authorities took Nadarkhani and the
three other sentenced Christians to Evin Prison following a series of violent raids
on their homes in late July, which included beatings and electroshock weapons.
According to NGOs, the authorities also sentenced Nadarkhani and Omidi to two
years internal exile in the southern region of the country, far from their homes in
the country’s north near the Caspian Sea. As of May Omidi, Mossayebzadeh, and
Fadaie still awaited the outcome of the appeal of their September 2016 sentence of
80 lashes for consumption of communion wine. According to CSW, the
government sentenced Fadaie to an additional 18 months and another Christian,
Fatemaeh Bakhteri, to 12 months in prison for “spreading propaganda against the
regime.” Fadaie also received two years in internal exile in a remote area near the
Afghanistan border after his prison sentence.
On November 16, according to NGOs and media reports, security forces arrested
Christian converts Behnam Ersali and Davood Rasooli in separate raids and took
them to unknown locations. Six security agents arrested Ersali at his friend’s home
in Masshad and two security agents arrested Rasooli at his home in Karaj.
Mohabat News reported the detention and abuse of Karen Vartanian, an Armenian
Christian whom authorities initially arrested in December 2017 after participating
in student protests at Arak University. Vartanian faced a number of political
charges, including “promoting Christianity and anti-Islamic activities.” According
to Mohabat News and local media, Vartanian reportedly experienced physical and
psychological abuse, lost at least 15 kilograms (33 pounds) and suffered a heart
attack as a result of beatings.
According to a December 5 article in World Watch Monitor, citing information
from the NGO rights group Article 18, the government arrested 142 Christians
across multiple cities in one month. The authorities asked them to write down the
details of their Christian activities and told them not to have any more contact with
Christians or Christian groups. The authorities released most of them after a few
hours or days, but kept the suspected leaders in detention.
Activists and NGOs reported Yarsani activists and community leaders continued to
be subject to detention or disappearance for engaging in awareness raising
regarding government practices or discrimination. In March the Kurdistan Human
Rights Network (KHRN) reported authorities arrested Yarsani activist Seyyed
Peyman Pedrood. According to KHRN, Pedrood disappeared in late December
2017 after leaving home, and his family later received unofficial information that
security forces had arrested and transferred him to an unknown location.
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According to the BIC, approximately 90 Baha’is were in prison as of November.
The BIC stated that all arrests and detentions were directly linked to the
individual’s professed faith and religious identity. Charges brought against
Baha’is included “insulting religious sanctities,” “corruption on earth,”
“propaganda against the system,” espionage and collaboration with foreign entities,
and actions against national security. Charges also included involvement with the
Baha’i Institute for Higher Education (BIHE), a university-level educational
institution the government considered illegal. According to the BIC, in many
cases, the authorities made arrests in conjunction with raids on Baha’i homes,
during which they confiscated personal belongings, particularly religious books
and writings.
HRW reported the government arrested more than 20 Baha’is in Shiraz, Karaj, and
Isfahan on unknown charges in August and September. According to Iran Press
Watch (IPC), MOIS officials on September 15 and 16 detained six Baha’i
environmental activists, Sudabeh Haghighat, Noora Pourmoradian, Elaheh
Samizadeh, Ehsan Mahboub Rahvafa, Navid Bazmandegan and his wife Bahareh
Ghaderi, on unknown charges in Shiraz. Human rights organizations and media
reported agents searched the home of Basmandegan and Ghaderi and took the
couple to an unknown location away from their five-year-old daughter Darya, who
suffered from cancer and required care post-treatment.
On November 23, BIC reported the government arrested more than 20 Baha’is in
multiple cities in the provinces of Tehran, Isfahan, Mazandaran, and East
Azerbaijan over the course of two weeks. The government also sentenced up to a
dozen Baha’is, including nine Baha’is in Isfahan, who received a combined
sentence of more than 40 years in prison on charges of “membership in the
unlawful administration of the perverse Baha’i sect for the purpose of action
against internal security” and “engaging in propaganda against the regime of the
Islamic Republic.”
CHRI reported the government detained Shiraz City Council member Mehdi Hajati
for 10 days in September for defending the “false Baha’i faith” after he tweeted
about his attempts to free two Baha’i detainees. The judiciary subsequently placed
Hajati under judicial surveillance and banned him from his seat on the council
According to CHRI, on April 23 authorities returned to Rajai Shahr Prison Afif
Naeimi, one of the seven leaders of the Yaran, a former group that tended to the
social and spiritual needs of the Baha’i community and that was formed with the
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knowledge and approval of the government. He had been on medical furlough due
to life-threatening ailments. CHRI reported, however, that upon return to prison,
his condition was still poor and the judiciary’s own medical experts had ruled him
too ill to be incarcerated. In 2008, authorities arrested the seven individuals and
sentenced them to 20 years in prison for “disturbing national security,” “spreading
propaganda against the regime,” and “engaging in espionage” before the sentences
were reduced to 10 years each on appeal. Since September 2017, authorities
released the other six leaders – Mahvash Sabet, Fariba Kamalabadi, Jamaloddin
Khanjani, Saeid Rezaie, Behrouz Tavakkoli, and Vahid Tizfahm – upon
completion of their sentences. According to BIC, authorities targeted these
individuals because of their religious affiliation.
In May BIC reported a series of arrests of Baha’is. On May 1, authorities detained
Baha’i Kaviz Nouzdahi at his home in Mashhad and took him to the city’s
Vakilabad Prison. BIC also reported that the next day MOIS agents arrested a man
identified only as “Motahhari” at his home in Isfahan. According to Iran Wire, on
May 6, Ministry of Information agents conducted an orchestrated raid of the
residences of four Baha’is, during which they arrested three Baha’is, Nooshin
Afshar, Neda Sabeti, and Forough Farzaneh, and took them to an unknown
location. Authorities reportedly searched their homes and confiscated their mobile
phones, computers, and religious books. BIC reported that the May arrestees faced
charges because of their religious beliefs. In a May 25 statement, BIC said the
“systematic nature” of the arrests in a number of provinces suggested “a
coordinated strategy on the part of government authorities.”
According to CHRI, on July 22 an appeals court in Kurdistan upheld a one-year
sentence for Zabihollah Raoufi, whom authorities accused of proselytizing his
Baha’i Faith. The court upheld Raoufi’s conviction on charges of “propaganda
against the state” and “assembly and collusion against national security by
promoting Baha’ism.” According to Iran Wire, on October 31 the 70-year-old
Raoufi reported to prison to start serving his sentence.
According to Iran Wire, on January 28 a court sentenced Fataneh Nabilzadeh, a
Baha’i resident of Mashhad, to one year in prison on the charge of “propaganda
against the regime.” MOIS officials had arrested Nabilzadeh in 2013 for
administering tests to her son and another Baha’i student on behalf of the BIHE.
According to January reports by CWWM and CSW, authorities sentenced two
Christians, Eskander Rezaie and Soroush Saraei, in Shiraz to eight years in prison
for “action against national security,” proselytizing, and holding house church
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meetings. Authorities also charged Saraei, the pastor of the Church of Shiraz, with
“forgery” for providing letters for students who did not want to attend Islamic
studies classes. The advocacy group Middle East Concern reported both men
appealed their sentences. During the same court hearing, a Christian woman,
Zahrar Nourouzi Kashkouli, received a one year prison sentence, for “being a
member of a group working against the system.”
According to the World Watch Monitor website, Article 18 reported Christian
convert Ali Amini remained in Tabriz Prison following his arrest by authorities in
December 2017 and had his laptop and cell phone confiscated. He remained in a
Tabriz Prison as of February.
Many Baha’is reportedly continued to turn to online education at BIHE despite
government censorship through use of internet filters, blocking of websites, and the
arrests of teachers associated with the program. Since the BIHE’s online and
offline operations remained illegal, students and teachers continued to face the risk
of arrest for participation. BIHE instructor Azita Rafizadeh remained in prison
serving a four-year sentence for teaching at the institution. Rafizadeh’s husband,
Peyman Koushk-Baghi, continued serving a five-year sentence. According to
Payam News, officials initially arrested Koushk-Baghi in March 2016 while
visiting his wife at Evin Prison. Tehran Revolutionary Court sentenced them on
charges of “membership in the illegal and misguided Baha’i group with the aim of
acting against national security through illegal activities at the BIHE educational
institute.” CHRI reported that on January 3 Evin Prison authorities told Rafizadeh
she would only be considered for furlough if she apologized for teaching online
classes to members of her faith. Authorities reportedly said she must sign a
statement to repenting for her work and promising she would not work there again.
Christians, particularly evangelicals and converts from Islam, continued to
experience disproportionate levels of arrests and detention, and high levels of
harassment and surveillance, according to Christian NGO reports. Numerous
Christians remained imprisoned at year’s end on charges related to their religious
beliefs. Prison authorities reportedly continued to withhold medical care from
prisoners, including some Christians, according to human rights groups.
According to human rights NGOs, the government also continued to enforce the
prohibition on proselytizing.
According to Mohabat News, the Revolutionary Court of Bushehr on June 20
sentenced Christian convert Payam Kharaman and 11 other Christians to one year
in prison on the charge of “propaganda” activities against the government and
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promotion of “Zionist Christianity” through house meetings, evangelism, and
proselytizing. Authorities initially arrested the 12 Christians in Bushehr in April
2016. CWWM reported that on March 2 authorities arrested 20 Christians in a
workshop near the city of Karaj when security forces raided the premises. Among
those detained, authorities reportedly permitted Christian convert Aziz Majidzadeh
to contact his family in April; he informed them that he and the others were being
held at Evin Prison awaiting formal charges. He reportedly said his interrogators
focused on activities related to his Christian faith. Article 18 reported on May 20
that authorities had released Majidzadeh pending a full investigation and trial.
Various media outlets and NGOs reported that on June 25, authorities released
Mohammadali Yassaghi, a Christian also known as Estifan, from prison following
a hearing at the Revolutionary Court in Babolsar, in which the presiding judge
dismissed the charges against him. The authorities arrested Yassaghi on April 10
on accusations of “spreading propaganda against the establishment” and later
transported him to Babol Prison in Mazandaran Province. According to CSW,
Yassaghi was a member of the Church of Iran and converted to Christianity more
than 20 years ago.
International media reported that on March 6 government officials detained Shia
cleric Hossein Shirazi, the son of Ayatollah Sadegh Shirazi. Both Hossein Shirazi
and his father, a senior cleric in the Qom Seminary, were reportedly critical of the
government. Authorities detained Hossein Shirazi in Qom after he attended an
Islamic theology class. During a lecture in February, Hossein Shirazi reportedly
likened the country’s principle of Velayat Faghih – or the rule of a single jurist – to
the “regimes of pharaohs in Egypt.” He also reportedly accused the country’s
leaders of tyranny. Ayatollah Sadegh Shirazi’s opponents have accused him of
promoting “British Shiism” and receiving funds from Britain and Saudi Arabia.
In January HRANA reported that security forces arrested Shia cleric Mohammad
Mehdi Nekounam, son of Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Nekounam, a senior cleric
detained in October 2017. According to HRANA, authorities also raided
Mohammad Mehdi Nekounam’s home and seized all communication devices,
including cell phones and laptops, without providing an arrest warrant. Authorities
arrested his father, Ayatollah Nekounam, in 2015 and sentenced him to five years
in prison and an undisclosed number of lashes. The court also stripped Ayatollah
Nekounam of his right to clerical office. The court reportedly said it would not
disclose any details about either case to “protect” the status of the clergy. Sources
stated the arrests were related to Nekounam's indirect criticism of other clerics.
Reportedly he indirectly criticized Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi's opposition to fast
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internet services and also criticized an incident in Isfahan in which individuals
threw acid on women to punish them for improper hijabs. In an interview,
Nekounam stated, “The one who throws acid [at others] is the most violent
person.” HRANA reported in January of Ayatollah Nekounam’s ailing health
following a stroke in the Qom Prison, but said authorities denied him access to his
medications.
There were continued reports of authorities placing restrictions on Baha’i
businesses or forcing them to shut down after they had temporarily closed in
observance of Baha’i holidays or of authorities threatening shop owners with
potential closure, even though businesses could legally close without providing a
reason for up to 15 days a year. In November BIC reported that authorities shut
down more than a dozen Baha’i businesses in Khuzestan Province after the owners
closed their businesses temporarily in observance of two Baha’i holidays.
According to IPC, on July 28 authorities shut down a Baha’i-owned business in the
city of Kashan. HRANA reported that the “Kashan Office of Properties refused to
issue a business permit for optician shop of Javad Zabihian, due to his Baha’i
Faith. The Office of Properties then shut down and sealed Mr. Zabihian’s
business.” According to HRANA, the Superior Administrative Court on August
16 denied a petition to open 24 shuttered Baha’i-owned businesses in Urmia.
From July 9 through mid-August 2017, authorities reportedly sealed the businesses
for closing in observance of a Baha’i holy day. In August HRANA reported three
Baha’is, Sahba Haghbeen, Samira Behinayeen, and Payam Goshtasbi, were fired
from their jobs in Shiraz in a “continued effort to put economic constraints on
Iranian Baha’is.” HRANA also reported that on May 10, the MOIS office in Maku
summoned Shahin Dehghan, a Baha’i citizen, and informed him that he had 10
days to sell his business or it would be confiscated and he would be sent to prison.
According to BIC, the government continued to raid Baha’i homes and businesses
and confiscate private and commercial property, as well as religious materials.
The government continued to hold many Baha’i properties it seized following the
1979 revolution, including cemeteries, holy places, historical sites, and
administrative centers. The government also continued to prevent Baha’is from
burying their dead in accordance with their religious tradition. According to
HRANA, security forces in Kerman prevented the burial of a Baha’i from Kerman,
Hussein Shodjai, who died on August 26, and forced his family to bury the
deceased in the city of Rafsanjan. The authorities’ demand contravened Baha’i
burial laws, under which the distance from the place of death to the burial place
should not exceed one hour, according to the Kitab-i-Aqdas, the central holy book
of the Baha’i Faith. IPC also reported that on March 16 authorities sealed the
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Baha’i cemetery of Kerman (known as the Eternal Garden) without specific
justification.
In August BIC reported continued instances of the desecration and destruction of
Baha’i property and holy sites. Many government offices, including the City
Council, the governor’s office, and the deputy governor’s office refused to take
any action. In November CHRI reported local authorities relocated the buried
body of a Baha’i woman without the permission of the family.
According to human rights organizations, Christian advocacy groups, and NGOs,
the government continued to regulate Christian religious practices. Official reports
and the media continued to characterize Christian house churches as “illegal
networks” and “Zionist propaganda institutions.” Christian community leaders
stated that if the authorities learned Armenian or Assyrian churches were baptizing
new converts or preaching in Farsi, they closed the churches. Authorities also
reportedly barred unregistered or unrecognized Christians from entering church
premises and closed churches that allowed them to enter.
Christian advocacy groups continued to state the government, through pressure and
church closures, had eliminated all but a handful of Farsi-language church services,
thus restricting services almost entirely to the Armenian and Assyrian languages.
Security officials monitored registered congregation centers to perform identity
checks on worshippers to confirm non-Christians or converts did not participate in
services. In response, many Christian converts reportedly practiced their religion
in secret. Other nonrecognized religious minorities such as Baha’is and Yarsanis
were also forced to gather in private homes to practice their faith in secret.
The government continued to curb Christian practices at cemeteries, and
authorities confiscated properties owned by Christian religious organizations.
CHRI reported that on March 7 a group controlled by the supreme leader issued an
eviction order for Sharon Gardens, a Christian retreat center occupying 2.5 acres of
land in in the Valadabad District of Karaj, 32 miles west of the capital. The center
was owned by the country’s largest Christian Protestant organization, the Jama’at-e
Rabbani Church Council, also known as the Iran Assemblies of God, since the
early 1970s; the eviction reflected a 2015 revolutionary court order for its
confiscation.
The government continued to monitor the statements and views of senior Shia
religious leaders. Shia religious leaders who did not support government policies
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or Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s views reportedly continued to face
intimidation, arrest, and imprisonment on charges related to religious offenses.
Critics stated the government used extrajudicial special clerical courts to control
non-Shia Muslim clerics, as well as to prosecute Shia clerics who expressed
controversial ideas and participated in activities outside the sphere of religion, such
as journalism or reformist political activities.
The government continued to require women of all religious groups to adhere to
“Islamic dress” standards in public, including covering their hair and fully
covering their bodies in loose clothing – a manteau (overcoat) and a hijab
(headscarf) or, alternatively, a chador (full body length semicircle of fabric worn
over both the head and clothes). Although the government at times eased
enforcement of rules for such dress, it also punished “un-Islamic dress” with
arrests, lashings, fines, and dismissal from employment. The government
continued to crack down on other public displays it deemed counter to its
interpretation of Shia Islam laws, such as dancing and men and women appearing
together in public. In June security agents arrested a female teenager, Maedeh
Hojabri, for posting videos of herself dancing without a hijab on Instagram.
Authorities then aired on state television a video of Hojabri, who acknowledged
breaking moral norms while insisting that she was not encouraging others to follow
her example, according to a report by Radio Farda. International media widely
reported her arrest, as well as an outpouring of social media support for Hojabri
from fellow citizens. According to a February report by HRW, authorities arrested
at least three women protesting the country’s dress code/hijab laws in January and
February. Officials arrested Nargess Hosseini on January 29 when she took off her
headscarf in a public protest against the hijab laws. They arrested Azam Jangravi
on February 14 and Shaparak Shajarizadeh on February 21 in similar
circumstances. On June 13, authorities arrested Nasrin Sotoudeh, a human rights
attorney who had represented the women, telling her husband that authorities were
taking her to prison for a sentence she had received in absentia. Authorities
sentenced Hosseini in March to 24 months in prison, suspending 21 months of her
sentence. On social media, Shajarizadeh stated on July 9 that a court had
sentenced her to 20 years in prison, suspending 18 years of the sentence.
HRW also reported that on July 27, state TV’s “20:30” program featured an
interview with the sister of anti-hijab activist Masih Alinejad, denouncing
Alinejad’s advocacy against compulsory hijab laws. In a post on social media and
in a New York Times op-ed piece, Alinejad stated that, despite her sister’s
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statements that she had appeared on the program of her own free will, authorities
pressured her family to denounce her on state television.
Authorities reportedly continued to deny the Sabean-Mandaean and Yarsan
religious communities access to higher education and government employment
unless they declared themselves as Christian or Muslim, respectively, on their
application forms.
Public and private universities continued to deny Baha’is admittance and to expel
Baha’i students once their religion became known. In September BIC and IPC
reported that at least 60 Baha’is were banned from universities during the year due
to their religious beliefs and despite passing the entrance exam “under the false
pretenses that they had ‘incomplete files’ or that their names were not in the
registration list.” The report also stated that officials told many Baha’i students
who passed the grueling National University Entrance Exam, known as “Konkur,”
that they might be able to study, but that they would need to write a letter and
disavow their faith in order to do so.
CHRI reported that from March to September authorities expelled at least 50
Baha’i students from universities because of their religious beliefs. In July CHRI
reported a Baha’i woman, Sarir Movaghan, was expelled from the Islamic Azad
University in Isfahan. Movaghan declared she was Baha’i on the university
enrollment form and was accepted, but four years later and just before her final
exams, she was expelled. According to CHRI, the university contacted Movaghan
in May and told her that, as a Baha’i, she should have known that she could not be
at the university. Many Baha’is reportedly did not try to enroll in state-run
universities because of the Baha’i Faith’s tenet not to deny one’s faith.
According to BIC, government regulations continued to ban Baha’is from
participating in more than 25 types of work, many related to food industries,
because the government deemed them “unclean.”
According to Mazjooban Noor, the official website of the Gonabadi dervishes,
authorities continued to dismiss Gonabadi dervishes from employment and bar
them from university studies for affiliation with the Sufi order. CHRI reported that
authorities expelled Sepideh Moradi Sarvestani, a member of the Gonabadi
dervishes, from Tehran's Tarbiat Modares University on February 3 “for refusing
to formally pledge not to engage in activities deemed unacceptable by officials.”
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Members of the Sunni community continued to dispute statistics published in 2015
on the website of the Mosques Affairs Regulating Authority stating there were nine
Sunni mosques operating in Tehran and 15,000 across the country. Community
members said the vast majority of these were simply prayer rooms or rented prayer
spaces. International media and the Sunni community continued to report
authorities prevented any new Sunni mosques from being built in Tehran. Sunnis
reported the number of mosques in the country did not meet the demands of the
population.
Because the government barred them from building or worshiping in their own
mosques, Sunni leaders said they continued to rely on ad hoc, underground prayer
halls, or namaz khane, to practice their faith. Security officials continued to raid
these unauthorized sites. In August international media reported police dispersed
Sunni worshipers who had gathered outside a prayer hall in Tehran's eastern
Resalat neighborhood. Authorities barred the worshipers from entering the venue
to hold communal prayers on Eid al-Adha. The Sunni congregation had reportedly
obtained an official permit from the Ministry of Interior and the Tehran
governorate's political deputy.
MOIS and law enforcement reportedly continued to harass Sufis and Sufi leaders.
Media and human rights organizations reported continued censorship of the
Gonabadi order’s Mazar Soltani websites, which contained speeches by the order’s
leader, Noor Ali Tabandeh, and articles on mysticism.
International media and NGOs reported continued government-sponsored anti-
Christian propaganda to deter the practice of or conversion to Christianity.
According to Mohabat News, the government routinely propagated anti-Christian
publications and online materials, such as the book Christian Zionism in the
Geography of Christianity, published in 2017.
According to members of the Sabean-Mandaean and Yarsan religious
communities, authorities continued to deny them permission to perform religious
ceremonies in public and to deny them building permits for places of worship.
Yarsanis reported continued discrimination and harassment in the military and
school systems. They also continued to report that the birth registration system
prevented them from giving their children Yarsani names. A March report by the
UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran stated Yarsanis
continued to face a range of human rights violations, including attacks on their
places of worship, the destruction of community cemeteries, and arrests and torture
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of community leaders. The report provided “accounts of individuals being fired
after it is discovered that they are Yarsan, and of individuals being forcibly shaved
(the moustache is a holy symbol for the Yarsan community) when they refused to
pray, for example when undertaking military service.”
According to the Tehran Jewish Committee, five Jewish schools and two
kindergartens continued to operate in Tehran, but authorities required their
principals be Muslim. The government reportedly continued to allow Hebrew
language instruction but limited the distribution of Hebrew texts, particularly
nonreligious texts, making it difficult to teach the language, according to the
Jewish community. The government reportedly required Jewish schools to remain
open on Saturdays, in violation of Jewish religious law, to conform to the schedule
of other schools.
According to Christian NGOs, government restrictions on published religious
material continued, including confiscations of books about Christianity already on
the market, although government-sanctioned translations of the Bible reportedly
existed. Government officials frequently confiscated Bibles and related non-Shia
religious literature, and pressured publishing houses printing unsanctioned non-
Muslim religious materials to cease operations. Books about the Yarsan religion
remained banned. Books published by religious minorities, regardless of topic,
were required to carry labels on the cover denoting their non-Shia Muslim
authorship.
Sunni leaders continued to report authorities banned Sunni religious literature and
teachings from religion courses in some public schools, even in predominantly
Sunni areas. Other schools, notably in the Kurdish regions, included specialized
Sunni religious courses for the students. Assyrian Christians reported the
government continued to permit their community to use its own religious textbooks
in schools after the government reviewed and authorized their content.
Unrecognized religious minorities, such as Yarsanis and Baha’is, continued to
report they were unable to legally produce or distribute religious literature.
In July Sepanta Niknam, a Zoroastrian, was restored to his position on the Yazd
City Council following a ruling that constitutionally recognized religious
minorities could run in local elections. According to CHRI, on July 21, by a two-
thirds majority, the Expediency Council, the country’s highest arbiter of disputes
between state branches, voted to amend the Law on the Formation, Duties, and
Election of National Islamic Councils, thereby affirming the right of
constitutionally recognized religious minorities to run in local elections. In
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September 2017, local and international media reported that the Yazd Court of
Administrative Justice called for the suspension of Niknam. After being re-elected
to the council in May 2017, the court forced him to step down after issuing a ruling
that as a member of a religious minority, Niknam could not be elected to a council
in a Muslim-majority constituency. The ruling was in response to a complaint
lodged by his unsuccessful Muslim opponent.
Sunnis reported continued underrepresentation in government-appointed positions
in the provinces where they formed a majority, such as Kurdistan and Khuzestan,
as well as an inability to obtain senior government positions. In January CHRI
observed that while there were 21 Sunni representatives in the 290-member
parliament, no Sunni had served in a ministerial position since the founding of the
Islamic Republic despite comprising a significant percent of the population.
Sunni activists continued to report that throughout the year, and especially during
the month of Moharam, the government sent hundreds of Shia missionaries to
areas with large Sunni Baluch populations to try to convert the local population.
International media quoted Jewish community representatives such as Siamak
Morsadegh, the sole Jewish member of parliament, as stating that there continued
to be government restrictions and discrimination against Jews as a religious
minority, but that there was little interference with Jewish religious practices.
According to the Tehran Jewish Committee, there were 31 synagogues in Tehran,
more than 20 of them active, and 100 synagogues throughout the country. Jewish
community representatives said they were free to travel in and out of the country,
and the government generally did not enforce a prohibition against travel to Israel
by Jews, although it enforced the prohibition on such travel for other citizens.
Government officials continued to employ anti-Semitic rhetoric in official
statements and sanction it in media outlets, publications, and books. During
remarks on June 15, Supreme Leader Khamenei said, “the Zionist regime, which
has a legitimacy problem, will not last… and through Muslim nations’ vigilance,
be certainly destroyed.” Government-sponsored rallies continued to include chants
of “death to Israel” and participants accused other religious minorities, such as
Baha’is and Christians, of collusion with Israel. Local newspapers carried editorial
cartoons that were anti-Semitic in nature, often focusing on developments in Israel
or elsewhere in the region, including the move of the U.S. embassy in Israel to
Jerusalem. The May 15 edition of the newspaper Tasnim carried a cartoon that
portrayed Israel as a snake intent on devouring Jerusalem. On February 13, the
website Javan published an article, entitled “The Use of Corrupt Jewish Women by
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Secret Spy Services to Trap Important World Figures,” that claimed that Jewish
religious law allowed Jewish women to use their gender and femininity to gather
intelligence for Mossad.
According to human rights activists, the government maintained a legal
interpretation of Islam that required citizens of all faiths to follow strict rules based
on the government’s interpretation of Shia jurisprudence, creating differentiation
under the law between the rights granted to men and women. The government
continued to enforce gender segregation and discrimination throughout the country
without regard to religious affiliation.
The government continued to maintain separate election processes for the five
seats reserved for representatives of the recognized religious minority communities
in parliament.
The government continued to allow recognized religious minority groups to
establish community centers and certain self-financed cultural, social, athletic,
and/or charitable associations.
Section III. Status of Societal Respect for Religious Freedom
Baha’is and those who advocated for their rights reported that Baha’is continued to
be major targets of social stigma and violence, and that perpetrators continued to
act with impunity or, even when arrested, faced diminished punishment following
admissions that their acts were based on the religious identity of the victim.
There continued to be reports of non-Baha’is dismissing or refusing employment to
Baha’is, sometimes in response to government pressure, according to BIC and
other organizations monitoring the situation of Baha’is in Iran. BIC continued to
report instances of employment discrimination and physical violence committed
against Baha’is based on their faith. Baha’is reported there were continued
incidents of destruction or vandalism of their cemeteries.
In October IPC reported “tens of thousands more [Baha’is] experience educational,
economic and cultural persecution on a daily basis for merely practicing their
faith.” According to BIC, anti-Baha’i rhetoric increased markedly in recent years.
In August a BIC report noted the continued harassment, vilification, and
psychological pressure children and adolescents known to be Baha’is experience in
primary, middle, and high schools throughout the country.
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Yarsanis outside the country reported that widespread discrimination against
Yarsanis continued. They stated Yarsani children were socially ostracized in
school and shared community facilities. Yarsani men, recognizable by their
particular mustaches, often faced employment discrimination. According to
reports, Shia preachers often encouraged such social discrimination against
Yarsanis.
According to CSW, Open Doors USA, and others, converts from Islam to
Christianity faced ongoing societal pressure and rejection by family or community
members.
Shia clerics and prayer leaders reportedly continued to denounce Sufism and the
activities of Sufis in both sermons and public statements.
Sunni students reported professors routinely continued to insult Sunni religious
figures in class.
Section IV. U.S. Government Policy and Engagement
The U.S. has no diplomatic relations with the country, and therefore, did not have
opportunities to raise concerns directly with the government over its religious
freedom abuses and restrictions.
The U.S. government continued to call for the government to respect religious
freedom and continued to condemn its abuses of religious minorities in a variety of
ways and in different international forums. This included public statements by
senior U.S. government officials and reports issued by U.S. government agencies,
support for relevant UN and NGO efforts, diplomatic initiatives, and sanctions.
Senior U.S. government officials publicly reiterated calls for the release of
prisoners held on grounds related to their religious beliefs.
In July the Secretary of State called attention to the situation of religious freedom
in the country in a town hall speech on “Supporting Iranian Voices” and an opinion
editorial appearing in USA Today. In his op-ed, the Secretary of State said,
“Hundreds of Sufi Muslims in Iran remain imprisoned on account of their beliefs,
with reports of several dying at the hands of Iran’s brutal security forces. The
religious intolerance of the regime in Iran also applies to Christians, Jews, Sunnis,
Baha’is, Zoroastrians, and other minority religious groups simply trying to practice
their faiths.” At the July U.S.-hosted Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom,
the U.S. and four other governments issued a statement on Iran. In the statement,
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the governments said, “Many members of Iranian religious minorities – including
Baha’is, Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, and Sunni and Sufi Muslims – face
discrimination, harassment, and unjust imprisonment because of their
beliefs….The Iranian regime continues its crackdown on Gonabadi
Sufis.…Baha’is also face particularly severe ill-treatment. As with many other
minority communities, Iranian authorities reportedly harass, arrest, and mistreat
Baha’is on account of their faith, and in May the Baha’i International Community
reported an uptick in arbitrary arrests and raids across the country.…The
Government of Iran continues to execute dissidents, political reformers, and
peaceful protesters on charges brought because of their peaceful religious beliefs or
activities. Blasphemy, apostasy from Islam, and efforts to proselytize Muslims are
punishable by death, contrary to Iran’s international human rights
obligations….We strongly urge the Government of Iran to cease its violations of
religious freedom and ensure that all individuals – regardless of their beliefs – are
treated equally and can live out their lives and exercise their faith in peace and
security.”
During a September press briefing, the Special Representative for Iran called for an
end to religious persecution in Iran, stating: “What we are demanding of the
Iranian regime…stop persecuting civil society, please provide all Iranian citizens
with due process regardless of their political and religious beliefs.” In June a
Department of State spokesperson condemned “the Iranian government’s
execution of Mohammad Salas, a member of the long-persecuted Iranian Gonabadi
Sufi Dervish community.”
The United States again supported an extension of the mandate of the UN special
rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran in a vote at the UN Human
Rights Council. The United States also voted in December in the General
Assembly in favor of a resolution expressing concern over Iran’s human rights
practices, including the continued persecution of religious minorities.
Since 1999, Iran has been designated as a CPC under the International Religious
Freedom Act of 1998 for having engaged in or tolerated particularly severe
violations of religious freedom. On November 28, the Secretary of State
announced the redesignation of Iran as a CPC and identified the existing sanctions
as ongoing travel restrictions based on serious human rights abuses under section
221(a)(1)(C) of the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012,
pursuant to section 402(c)(5) of the Act.